GEA RT becomes GEA Heating & Refrigeration Technologies

GEA increasingly offers customers solutions to help reduce CO₂ emissions
GEA’s heating – and refrigeration plant room at Wipasz, Poland

GEA’s heating – and refrigeration plant room at Wipasz, Poland

Photo - GEA

GEA Group announced that its Refrigeration Technologies division is now operating under GEA Heating & Refrigeration Technologies. The renaming reflects GEA’s leading position as sustainable heating and cooling technology supplier under one roof. This allows GEA to offer its customers solutions with increased efficiency and reduced CO₂ emissions, helping them accelerate the transition to greener technologies.

Heat accounts for more than half of the global total final energy consumption and is still mainly produced using fossil fuels. Companies are consequently looking for better ways to reduce their carbon footprint and optimize their energy efficiency. In applications such as food, beverage and dairy processing, products are usually heated up and then refrigerated. GEA’s heat pumps reuse and upcycle waste heat from essential refrigeration processes and repurpose it in the production process. This significantly reduces the energy demand of many industries. Simply put: Heat that would be wasted can now be used to replace carbon emissions.

“Our name change signals our long-term commitment to the growing heating and refrigeration market by providing our customers with integrated solutions that are more energy-efficient and better for the environment,” says Kai Becker, chief executive officer of GEA Heating & Refrigeration Technologies. “We have the knowledge, the technology, and the ability to successfully implement innovative projects that enable customers to build green factories that comply with current and future emission targets.”

Providing customers better access to heating and cooling technology

To give customers easier access to the latest heat pump technology, GEA is investing a high single-digit million-Euro sum to extend its test centers throughout Europe.

The expansion from 400m² to 850m² of its existing test center in Berlin started in May 2021 and is scheduled to conclude in 2023. As the facility will be 90% automated and operational 24/7, customers will benefit from digital and real-time machine and performance data. In Den Bosch, Netherlands, GEA integrates its off-site test centers into the existing factory and extends it with new state-of-the-art test equipment.

“These measures help drive GEA’s own sustainability goals as well as increase customer satisfaction by providing them support on their road to decarbonization,” Becker adds. “We are now seizing the opportunity to expand our division sustainably, and this is a perfect example of engineering for a better world.”

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